Celebrity Birthdays and On-This-Day

October 4th:

2001 - In Washington, DC, Reagan National Airport re-opened. The airport had been closed since the terrorist attacks on the United States on September 11, 2001.
1990 - FOX began airing "Beverly Hills 90210." It ran for 10 seasons.
1976 - Barbara Walters joined Harry Reasoner at the anchor desk of the "ABC Evening News" for the first time
1970 - Janis Joplin was found dead of a heroin overdose at the age of 27. She had just finished recording her second album "Pearl."
1962 - "Love Me Do" was released by the Beatles
1957 - "Leave it to Beaver" debuted on CBS-TV.
1931 - The comic strip "Dick Tracy" made its debut in the Detroit Daily Mirror. The strip was created by Chester Gould.
1535 - The first complete English translation of the Bible was printed in Zurich, Switzerland

Elena Katina (singer for dance/rock duo Tatu) 1984Rachel Leigh Cook ("She's All That", "Antitrust", "Josie and the Pussycats", "11:14") 1979Alicia Silverstone ("Clueless", "A Blast From the Past" star got her start in the mid-'90s in several Aerosmith music videos) 1976Anne Rice (author writes mainly about Witches and Vampires) 1941Leroy Van Dyke (country/pop singer most famous for the hit "Just Walk On By") 1929Charlton Heston ["Ben-Hur", "The 10 Commandments", "Planet of the Apes", was 3-term President of the National Rifle Association (NRA)] 1924Rutherford B. Hayes (19th US President 1877-81) 1822

1999 - Prince released the single "The Greatest Romance Ever Sold." From the mostly rock album "Rave Unto the Joy Fantastic", it was said to be his comeback album, even though he had released albums consistantly throughout the '90s.
1989 - Jim Bakker, a televangelist, was convicted of using his television show to defraud his viewers.
1991 - Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev announced that his country would cut its nuclear arsenal in response to the arms reduction that was initiated by U.S. President George Bush.
1975 - "Cats in the Cradle" was released by Harry Chapin.
1974 - American David Kunst completed the first journey around the world on foot. It took four years and 21 pairs of shoes. He crossed four continents and walked 14,450 miles.
1969 - "Monty Python's Flying Circus" debuted on BBC television.
1968 - "White Room" by Cream was released. Cream, which included Eric Clapton, were only together 5 years, releasing 4 albums.
1968 - "Magic Carpet Ride" was released by Steppenwolf.
1951 - "The Honeymooners" was introduced during Jackie Gleason's first variety series "Cavalcade of Stars."
1947 - U.S. President Harry S. Truman held the first televised presidential address from the White House. The subject was the current international food crisis.

Nicky Hilton (The lesser known of the Hilton Sisters) 1983Kate Winslet (English actress best known for her topless scene in "Titanic", also was in several little-seen movies: "Eternal Sunshine", "Quills", "The Life of David Gale", "Finding Neverland", "Iris", "Romance & Cigarettes", "Hideous Kinky", "Enigma") 1975Guy Pearce (New Zealand/English actor: "Memento", "The Time Machine", "L.A. Confidential", "The Count of Monte Cristo") 1967Bernie Mac (born Bernard McCullough, commedian had a sitcom that ran for 5 years: "The Bernie Mac Show") 1957Karen Allen ("Raiders of the Lost Ark") 1951Steve Miller (singer: "The Joker", "Take the Money and Run", "Rock 'n' Me", "Fly Like An Eagle", "Jet Airliner", "Jungle Love", "Abracadabra") 1943Bil Keane (created the Christian comic strip "The Family Circus") 1922Donald Pleasence (Dr. Loomis in "Halloween 1-2, 4-6", "You Only Live Twice", "All Quiet on the Western Front (1979)", "Oh God") 1919Ray Kroc (Founded McDonald's Restaurnt in 1954) 1902Chester Arthur (21st US President 1881-85) 1829

2002 - Opus Dei founder Josemaría Escrivá is canonized (made into a saint). The group was made famous in "The DaVinci Code."
2000 - The first episode of CBS's "CSI: Las Vegas" aired.
1996 - Faith Hill and Tim McGraw were married.
1939 - Adolf Hitler denied any intention to wage war against Britain and France in an address to Reichstag.
1847 - "Jane Eyre" by Charlotte Bronte was first published in London.

2003 - In California, Arnold Schwarzenegger was elected governor in the recall election of Governor Gray Davis.
2001 - The U.S. and Great Britain began airstrikes in Afghanistan in response to that state's support of terrorism and Osama bin Laden. The act was the first military action taken in response to the terrorist attacks on the U.S. on September 11, 2001.
2001 - Barry Bonds (San Francisco Giants) hit his 73rd home run of the season and set a new major league record.
1968 - The Motion Picture Association of America adopted the film-rating system that ranged G, PG, PG-13, R, X. X was later changed to NC-17.
1950 - The U.S.-led U.N. forces crossed the 38th parallel and entered North Korea. China in November proved their threat to enter the war by sending several hundred thousand troops over the border into North Korea.
1913 - For the first time, Henry Ford's entire Highland Park automobile factory was run on a continuously moving assembly line when the chassis was added to the process.

2004 - The first-ever direct presidential elections were held in Afghanistan.
2004 - At Alderson Federal Prison Camp, WV, Martha Stewart began her five-month prison sentence. The sentence was imposed for Stewart lying about a stock sale.
2000 - NBC debuted the television series "Ed." The show ran for four seasons, 83 episodes.
2000 - The first episode of "Nikki" aired on the WB network. The show only ran for 2 seasons.
1980 - Prince released the album "Dirty Mind". It was his 3rd album.
1971 - The Communist anthem "Imagine" was released by John Lennon.
1957 - Jerry Lee Lewis released the song "Great Balls Of Fire."
1944 - "The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet" debuted on CBS radio. It changed over to TV in 1952 and ran for a total of 501 episodes.
1871 - The Great Fire of Chicago broke out destroying about 17,450 buildings. About 250 people were killed and 90,000 were left homeless.

2006 - North Korea announces that it has tested its first nuclear device.
2005 - Smoking is fully banned on the UK rail network.
2005 - When Tropical Depression 23 strengthens into Hurricane Vince it makes the 2005 Atlantic Hurricane Season the first season on record to use a name beginning with V.
1994 - US President Clinton sent troops and warships to the Persian Gulf in response to Saddam Hussein sending thousands of troops and hundreds of tanks toward the Kuwaiti border.
1967 - Doc Severinsen replaced Skitch Henderson as musical director of "The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson."
1946 - The first electric blanket went on sale in Petersburg, VA.
1936 - The first generator at Boulder Dam began transmitting electricity to Los Angeles, CA. The name of the dam was later changed to Hoover Dam.
1888 - The public was admitted to the Washington Monument for the first time.
1876 - Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas Watson made their longest telephone call to date. It was a distance of two miles.
1776 - A group of Spanish missionaries settled in what is now San Francisco, CA.
1002 - The famous Viking, Leif Erikson, and his crew landed on North America. This is believed to be the first time a non-native reached the Western Hemisphere since Pangea broke apart.

Zachery Ty Bryan (The eldest son Brad Taylor on the sitcom "Home Improvement") 1981Brandon Routh (Clark Kent in "Superman Returns") 1979Steve Burns (Creator and original host of the popular children's show "Blues Clues") 1973Tony Shalhoub (played the lead role on TV's "Monk") 1953Scott Bakula (star of "Quantum Leap" series became the captain on "Enterprise") 1954Sharon Osbourne (Ozzy's wife had a short-lived talk show) 1952Jackson Browne (singer/songwriter of the '70s-80s: "The Pretender", "The Load-Out/Stay") 1948Brian Lamb (founder and CEO of the American TV channel C-SPAN) 1941John Lennon (Beatles' singer recorded the Communist anthem "Imagine") 1940

2001 - U.S. President George W. Bush presented a list of 22 most wanted terrorists.
1973 - Fiji became independent after of nearly a century of British rule.
1965 - The Red Baron made his first appearance in the "Peanuts" comic strip.
1964 - Shangri-Las released "Leader Of The Pack."
1962 - The BBC banned the song "Monster Mash" by Bobby "Boris" Pickett.
1911 - China's Manchu dynasty was overthrown by communiat revolutionaries under Sun Yat-sen.
1865 - The billiard ball was patented by John Wesley Hyatt.

Dale Earnhardt, Jr. (son of a famous NASCAR racer who died while racing became a NASCAR racer himself) 1974Mike Malinin (drummer for the Goo Goo Dolls: "Already There", "Iris", "Slide", "Here is Gone", "Stay With Me") 1967Tanya Tucker (country singer had her first hit at 14: "Delta Dawn", "Would You Lay With Me (In a Field of Stone)", "Love Me Like You Used To") 1958David Lee Roth (original singer for Van Halen: "Jump", "Panama") 1955Edward D. Wood, Jr. (directed several bad B-Sci/fi and horror movies in the 1950s-60s, directed "Plan 9 From Outer Space" which won "Worst Movie Ever Made," he was portrayed by Jonny Depp in the biopic "Ed Wood" in 1993) 1924Thelonious Monk (jazz pianist invented Bebop music) 1917

2006 - NY Yankees (American baseball) pitcher Cory Lidle crashed his personal plane into a high-rise condo in NY City. Cory, along with his co-pilot and 4 others in the building died.
1994 - The Colorado Supreme Court declared that the anti-gay rights measure in the state was unconstitutional.
1975 - "Saturday Night Live" was broadcast for the first time. George Carlin was the guest host.
1975 - Bill Clinton and Hillary Rodham were married in Fayetteville, AR.
1932 - In New York, the first telecast of a political campaign was aired.
1881 - David Henderson Houston patented the first roll film for cameras.

Michelle Wie (Hawaiian golfer played in the LPGA at age 12) 1989Michelle Trachtenberg (child star acted in: "Harriet the Spy", "Buffy (TV)", "Inspector Gadget", "Ice Princess", "Euro Trip") 1985Emily Deschanel (sister of Zooey, stars in the TV series "Bones", also in movies: "It Could Happen To You", "Cold Mountain", "The Alamo", "Spider-Man 2", "Glory Road", "Boogeyman") 1976Artie Lange ("MADtv" commedian became Howard Stern's radio co-host) 1967"Donita Dunes" (pornstar known for her enhanced 44GG breasts) 1966Luke Perry (TV: "90210", "Oz") 1966Mike Nelson (head writer and human star of "Mystery Science Thearer 3000") 1964Eleanor Roosevelt (US First Lady during the Great Depression and WW2) 1884John Henry Heinz (Founder of "57 Varieties" of Heinz ketchup) 1844Parson Mason Weems (Journalist remembered for his fictitious stories that he presented as fact. He was responsible for the story about George Washington cutting down his father's cherry tree.) 1759

2001 - A special episode of America's Most Wanted was aired that focused on 22 wanted terrorists. The show was specifically requested by U.S. President George W. Bush.
1997 - John Denver ("Rocky Mountain High", "Country Roads", "Sunshine on My Shoulder", "Leaving on a Jet Plane", "Thank God I'm a Country Boy") was killed when the plane he was piloting crashed into Monterey Bay, CA. He was 53 years old.
1997 - A Backstreet Boys concert in a central Madrid square was cancelled by city officials. 300 girls had to be treated after fainting in the heat. More than 7,000 fans came to the event that expected no more than 5,000.
1970 - Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice's opera "Jesus Christ Superstar" debuted on Broadway.
1938 - Filming began on "The Wizard of Oz."
1492 - Christopher Columbus, an Italian explorer, sighted Watling Island in the Bahamas. He believed that he had found Asia while attempting to find a Western ocean route to India. The same day he claimed the land for Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand of Spain. In all his travels, Columbus or his crews never set foot on mainland North or South America.

1995 - Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando, Florida admitted its 500-millionth guest.
1992 - A commercial flight record was set by an Air France supersonic jetliner for circling the Earth in 33 hours and one minute.
1963 - The Beatles appeared on the BBC's "Sunday Night at the Palladium." It was their first appearance on a major TV show.
1943 - During World War II, Italy signed an armistice with the Allies and declared war on Germany.

Christine Young (pornstar, left for Africa to do humanitarian work in April 2006) 1983Jon Micah Sumrall (lead singer for rock band Kutless: "Run", "Tonight", "Not What You See", "Sea of Faces", "Treason", "Shut Me Out", "Smile", "Hearts of the Innocent", had a song on the "Narnia" soundtrack) 1980Ashanti (R&B singer's debut in 2002) 1980Marie Osmond (hosted, with her brother, a variety show and talk show) 1959Chris Carter (creator of TV's "The X-Files", "Millenium" and 2 other, short-lived, TV series: "Harsh Realm", and "The Lone Gunmen" an X-Files spinoff) 1956Sammy Hagar (replaced David Lee Roth as singer of Van Halen in mid-80s, most famous for singing "Right Now" and "I Can't Drive 55") 1947Paul Simon (1/2 of Simon and Garfunkel: "The Bridge Over Troubled Water", "The Boxer", "Mrs. Robinson", solo sang: "You Can Call Me Al", "50 Ways to Leave Your Lover", "Graceland") 1941Lenny Bruce (Foul-mouthed commedian arrested several times in 1950-60s, bannned from performing in several major cities in US and Australia) 1925Margaret Thatcher (conservative Prime Minister of Great Britain from 1979-1990) 1925

2006 - Beginning on October 11, record amounts of snow fell in Buffalo and other parts of Western NY state. By Saturday, the city had 23 inches of snow (the most ever for the city in October), 3 people had died, and thousands were without electricity and water.
1981 - Prince released the album "Controversy". It was his 4th album.
1975 - "Rock & Roll All Night" was released by KISS.
1964 - Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his non-violent resistance to racial prejudice in America. He was the youngest person to receive the award.
1962 - The Cuban Missile Crisis began when U.S. reconnaissance aircrafts photographed Soviet construction of intermediate-range missile sites in Cuba.
1957 - "Jailhouse Rock" by Elvis Presley was released.
1926 - The book "Winnie-the-Pooh," by A.A. Milne, was published.

Terrence McGee (American football cornerback for the Buffalo Bills) 1980Stacy Keibler (Female wrestler in the WWE) 1979Usher (R&B singer: "Yeah", "Confessions", "Burn") 1979jessica drake (born Angela Patrice Heaslet, began in porn in 1999, she chooses to have her stage name all lowercase letters) 1976Ralph Lauren (Clothes designer) 1939Roger Moore (replaced Sean Connery as James Bond in several films) 1929e.e. Cummings (poet) 1894Dwight Eisenhower (34th US President 1953-61) 1890William Penn (US Quaker Colonial leader founded the colony of Pennsylvania) 1644

White Cane Safety Day, a day for blind and visually impared peoplePregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Day

1977 - "Rumours," the second album from Fleetwood Mac, was released.
1951 - The first episode of "I Love Lucy" aired on CBS.
1892 - The U.S. government announced that the land in the western Montana was open to settlers. The 1.8 million acres were bought from the Crow Indians for 50 cents per acre.
1860 - Grace Bedell, 11 years old, wrote a letter to presidential candidate Abraham Lincoln. The letter stated that Lincoln would look better if he would grow a beard.

Jaci Velasquez (Latina Christian/Pop singer: "I Will Rest In You", "Every Time I Fall", "God So Loved the World", "I Get on My Knees", "If This World", she was in the movie "Chasing Papi") 1979Vanessa Marcil (starrd in the series "Las Vegas") 1969Emeril Lagasse (TV chef "kicked it up a notch" with his short-lived sitcom) 1959Toriano Adaryll "Tito" Jackson (Member of The Jackson 5 and started the group T3 in the '90s) 1953Richard Carpenter (sang with his sister Karen as The Carpenters: "Close To You", "Top of the World", "We've Only Just Begun", "Rainy Days and Mondays", "It's Going To Take Some Time", "Hurting Each Other", "Sing a Song") 1946Penny Marshall (directed the sitcom "Laverne and Shirley" and movies such as "Big") 1942Mario Puzo (author wrote "The Godfather" in 1969) 1920

2002 - The Arthur Andersen accounting firm was sentenced to five years probation and fined $500,000 for obstructing a federeal investigation of the energy company Enron.
2002 - It was reported that North Korea had told the U.S. that it had a secret nuclear weapons program in violation of an 1994 agreement with the U.S.
1992 - Sinead O'Connor was booed off stage at Madison Square Garden during a show to honor Bob Dylan.
1971 - Isaac Hayes' "Theme From Shaft" was released.
1968 - The New Yardbirds played their first concert. The band later changed their name to Led Zeppelin.
1962 - U.S. President Kennedy was informed that there were missile bases in Cuba, beginning the Cuban missile crisis.
1946 - 10 Nazi war criminals were hanged after being condemned by the Nuremberg trials.
1923 - Walt Disney contracted with M.J. Winkler to distribute the Alice Comedies. This event is recognized as the start of the Disney Company.
1859 - Abolitionist John Brown led a raid on Harper's Ferry, VA (now located in West Virginia). He was looking for the government's store of weapons to use in a fight against slavery.
1793 - During the French Revolution, Queen Marie Antoinette was beheaded.

1979 - Mother Teresa of India was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
1933 - "News-Week" appeared for the first time at newsstands. The name was later changed to "Newsweek."
1917 - The Radio Corporation of America (RCA) was formed.
1888 - The first issue of "National Geographic Magazine" was released at newsstands.
1777 - American troops defeated British forces in Saratoga, NY. It was the turning point in the American Revolutionary War.

1997 - Hanson sang the national anthem at the opening game of the World Series.
1988 - The first episode of "Roseanne" aired on ABC.
1898 - The American flag was raised in Puerto Rico only one year after the Caribbean nation won its independence from Spain.
1867 - The U.S. took formal possession of Alaska from Russia. The land was purchased of a total of $7 million dollars (2 cents per acre).
1767 - The Mason-Dixon line was agreed upon. It was the boundary between Maryland and Pennsylvania. North of he line would contain free states, south would contain slave states.

Azlea Antistia (former Guess? model became a pornstar in 1998) 1976Jean-Claude Van Damme (action/martial arts movie actor) 1960Gary Richrath (singer for REO Speedwagon: "Take It On the Run", "Keep On Loving You", "Time For Me To Fly", "Can't Fight This Feeling", "Roll With The Changes") 1949Lee Harvey Oswald (John F. Kennedy's assasin was later shot by Jack Ruby) 1939Dawn Wells (Mary Ann on the sitcom "Gilligan's Island") 1938Peter Boyle (Tim Allen's Boss on "The Santa Clause", Ray's father on the sitcom "Everybody Loves Raymond") 1935George C. Scott (played General "Patton" in an award-winning movie, also portrayed Ebeneezer Scrooge in the most famous version of "The Christmas Carol") 1927Chuck Berry (early rocker/guitar player: "Johnny B Goode", "No Particular Place To Go", "You Never Can Tell", "Rock and Roll Music") 1926